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Sixteenth Note Rhythms

Lesson 2/71 | Study Time: 5 Min
Sixteenth Note Rhythms

Sixteenth Note Rhythms

In Lesson Three you were introduced to eighth note rhythm patterns.

Eighth note strums

In eighth note rhythm patterns there are 2 eighth note strums per beat and 8 eighth note strums in one bar * time. The strum on the "+" count is an up strum.

In sixteenth note rhythm patterns there are 4 strums per beat.

Play these sixteenth note strums holding an E chord.

Sixteenth note strums

There are 4 sixteenth note strums per beat.
There are 16 sixteenth note strums in one bar of * time.
Play the first down strum of each group of four strums louder, this will help you keep time and make the sixteenth note rhythm easier to play. When playing a sixteenth note rhythm the strum on the "+" count is a down strum.

The following sixteenth note rhythm pattern has sixteenth note strums on the third beat only. Play this pattern holding an E chord.

Sixteenth note Rhythm Pattern

Play the following chord progression using this rhythm pattern.

The following chord progression uses a rhythm pattern with sixteenth notes on the first two beats.

Here are some sixteenth note rhythm patterns. Practice the following patterns holding an E chord and then apply them to any chord progression. These patterns combine sixteenth note strums with quarter note strums.

The following chord progression uses a rhythm pattern which contains eighth note strums and sixteenth note strums. Notice that the eighth note strums on the "+" count are now a down strum, as opposed to how you would approach a regular eighth note rhythm pattern. See Lesson Three for more on eighth note rhythm patterns.

Sixteenth note Rhythm Pattern

The following example uses a sixteenth note rhythm pattern with a silent down strum on the third beat.

Sixteenth note Rhythm Pattern

Here are some more sixteenth note/eighth note combination rhythm patterns. Practice them holding an E chord and then apply them to other chord progressions you have learned.

Gary Turner

Gary Turner

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Class Sessions

1- Eighth Note Triplet Rhythms 2- F Major Chord 3- B Minor Chord 4- Minor Chords 5- Silent Strums and Continuous Rhythm 6- Eighth Note Rhythms 7- Suspended Chords 8- A Major Chord 9- Bass Note Rhythm Patterns 10- Alternative Chord Shapes 11- Rock Chords 12- LESSON ONE 13- Sixteenth Note Rhythms 14- Augmented Chords 15- INTRODUCTION 16- GLOSSARY OF MUSICAL TERMS 17- Chord Chart 18- How to Tune Your Guitar 19- Major Seventh Chords 20- Staccato Strumming 21- Rhythm Rests 22- Minor Seventh Chords 23- Major Sixth Chords 24- Alternate Bass Note Picking 25- Rhythm Rests and Eighth Note Strum Combinations 26- Diminished Chords 27- Silent Strum Rhythm Variations 28- Tuning to Another Instrument 29- More titles by LearnToPlayMusic.com 30- Chord Symbols 31- Arpeggio Playing 32- Turnaround Progressions 33- New Topic 34- <span class="symbolA">^</span> Time Rhythm Patterns 35- Eighth Note Rhythm Patterns 36- Slide Finger 37- The C Major Chord 38- Alternative Chord Fingerings 39- Approach to Practice 40- Tuning the Guitar to Itself 41- Combining Strumming And Arpeggio Patterns 42- The Seventh Chord 43- Bass Note Rhythm Patterns 44- 12 Bar Blues 45- Chord Progressions 46- Electronic Tuner 47- Tuning Hints 48- Rhythm Patterns 49- Notes on the Guitar Fretboard 50- Acoustic Guitars 51- Open Chord Shapes 52- The Chromatic Scale 53- Electric Guitars 54- Electric Guitars (played through an amplifier) 55- Guitar Fretboard 56- Amplifiers 57- How to Read Sheet Music 58- Strings 59- Easy Chord Table 60- Seating 61- How to Transpose 62- The Pick 63- The Capo 64- Right Arm Position 65- 12 Bar Blues 66- The Rudiments of Music 67- Turnarounds 68- Note Values 69- Notes, Rhythms and Rests 70- Chord Diagrams 71- Rhythm Symbols

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